Title :
Process and electrical (modulator) efficiency of plasma immersion ion implantation
Author :
Tian, Xiubo ; Zeng, Xuchu ; Chu, Paul K.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys. & Mater. Sci., City Univ. Hong Kong, Kowloon, China
fDate :
6/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Plasma immersion ion implantation (PIII) has been shown to be an effective surface modification technique. In PIII processes, the implantation voltage has a large impact on the process and electrical (modulator) efficiency. For experiments in which the sample temperature is raised to a constant value by ion bombardment only - without external heating - our simulation studies reveal that the low-voltage mode featuring a higher ion current density gives rise to a higher electrical efficiency with regard to both single- and batch-processing. The low-voltage mode also produces a thinner plasma sheath and lower energy loss to the passive resistor. The hardware capacitance is responsible for the reduction in the electrical efficiency. For PIII experiments conducted under typical conditions, e.g., plasma density of 5.0×10 9 cm-3, implanted area of 0.08 m2, and employing a 10 kΩ pull-down resistor for operations between 1 kV and 100 kV, the efficiency of the power modulator is quite low and generally less than 50% exclusive of the inefficiency stemming from secondary electrons. Our results demonstrate that the low-voltage, small pulse-duration operating mode has higher implantation efficiency compared to conventional high-voltage PIII. This can be attributed to the higher effective implantation efficiency ηe resulting from the smaller secondary electron coefficient at a lower voltage and higher electrical efficiency ηp, in the low-voltage, short-pulsewidth operating mode. Our work suggests that both the total implantation efficiency ηtotal and modification efficacy can be improved by elevated-temperature, high-frequency, low-voltage PIII
Keywords :
current density; ion density; ion implantation; plasma density; plasma deposition; plasma materials processing; plasma sheaths; surface treatment; 1 to 100 kV; 10 kohm; 50 percent; batch-processing; constant value; effective implantation efficiency; efficiency; electrical efficiency; elevated-temperature technique; energy loss; external heating; hardware capacitance; high-frequency technique; implantation efficiency; implantation voltage; implanted area; inefficiency; ion bombardment; ion current density; low-voltage mode; low-voltage short-pulsewidth operating mode; low-voltage small pulse-duration operating mode; low-voltage technique; modification efficacy; modulator efficiency; passive resistor; plasma density; plasma immersion ion implantation; plasma sheath; power modulator; process efficiency; pull-down resistor; sample temperature; secondary electron coefficient; secondary electrons; simulation; single-processing; surface modification technique; total implantation efficiency; Current density; Electrons; Energy loss; Plasma immersion ion implantation; Plasma sheaths; Plasma temperature; Resistance heating; Resistors; Time of arrival estimation; Voltage;
Journal_Title :
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on